Trevor Hughes

J. Trevor Hughes is the President and CEO of the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP).
In this role, Hughes leads the world's largest association of privacy professionals.

Hughes is an experienced attorney in privacy, technology and marketing law. He has provided testimony before
the U.S. Congress Commerce Committee, the Senate Commerce Committee, the Federal Trade Commission, the Home
Affairs Committee of the British Parliament and the EU Parliament on issues of privacy, surveillance, spam
and privacy-sensitive technologies. He is a member of the first class of Certified Information Privacy
Professionals (CIPP) and recently completed, with co-author Reed Freeman, Privacy Law in Marketing, published
by CCH.

Hughes has previously served as the executive director of the Network Advertising Initiative, a leading online
privacy trade association, and the Email Sender and Provider Coalition, a trade association working on e-mail
policy and practices. Prior to these roles, Hughes was director of privacy and corporate counsel for Engage, a
leading online media and software company. Before that, Hughes worked as corporate counsel for UnumProvident,
where he focused on legal issues associated with advertising and online insurance transactions.

Hughes is an adjunct professor of law at the University of Maine School of Law and has lectured on privacy at
Harvard, MIT, the London School of Economics, Boston College Law School, Georgetown University and Northeastern
University. He is a frequent speaker on privacy issues at conferences around the world. Hughes has been featured
on National Public Radio's "Morning Edition", the PBS "Nightly Business Report", BBC Radio, and in the New York
Times, Wall Street Journal, Forbes, PCWorld, Washington Post, Boston Globe and Business Week.

Hughes also has significant experience as a media official at the 1994 World Cup, 1996 Olympics and the 1999
Women's World Cup. A native of Canada, Hughes holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from the
University of Massachusetts and a Juris Doctorate from the University of Maine School of Law.